In his first two years after taking over as head of the New England Patriots’ personnel department, Eliot Wolf had a fairly simple job in the first round of the NFL Draft. All he had to do was make the obvious choice, a task made even easier by his team’s position: the Patriots were third on the clock in 2024 and fourth in 2025.

Fast forward to 2026, and Wolf and company enter the draft under completely different circumstances. As the reigning AFC champions and Super Bowl runner-ups, they are now set to select 31st overall on Thursday night.

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Naturally, most subsequent picks also come fairly late in their rounds compared to the last couple of years. In all, the Patriots’ 2026 draft portfolio looks like this:

Round 6: No. 191 (from Chiefs)

Round 6: No. 198 (from Vikings, via Texans, Vikings and 49ers)

Owners of 11 total picks, the Patriots have strength in numbers. In fact, only the Pittsburgh Steelers (12) own more selections heading into Thursday, with New England sharing second place with the Miami Dolphins, Baltimore Ravens and Jacksonville Jaguars.

However, there a distinction between quantity and quality when it comes to the value of a team’s draft capital has to be made. A first-round selection, which allows for the opportunity to select some of the top talent in the class, is a far more important asset than a later-round pick.

The Patriots have a lot of those late-rounders, including four in the sixth round alone. As a consequence of that and being slated to draft toward the tail end of every single round, the overall value of New England’s portfolio is relatively small: after ranking near the top of the league in 2024 and 2025, the team is now below average in all five of the major value charts.

Team

Johnson

Hill

Stuart

OTC

PFF

Rank Avg

New York Jets

4784

1395.06

79.7

7817

3.183

1.0

Las Vegas Raiders

4036

1334.69

71.0

7258

2.685

3.0

Miami Dolphins

3047

922.59

74.0

7632

2.998

3.4

New York Giants

3694

1058.58

67.2

6673

2.810

3.8

Cleveland Browns

3244

967.29

67.5

6787

2.790

4.0

Kansas City Chiefs

2870

862.40

63.8

6518

2.629

6.2

Tennessee Titans

2807

812.33

59.4

6163

2.465

7.4

Arizona Cardinals

3169

822.34

57.4

5731

2.308

7.4

New Orleans Saints

2252

670.81

52.0

5407

2.149

10.0

Dallas Cowboys

2327

712.80

50.7

5305

2.085

10.6

Pittsburgh Steelers

1774

572.47

53.3

6057

2.262

10.8

Baltimore Ravens

1912

577.73

48.0

5396

2.082

11.8

Houston Texans

1878

584.44

51.0

5302

2.069

12.0

Philadelphia Eagles

1615

511.80

47.2

5016

1.879

15.2

Tampa Bay Buccaneers

1799

545.00

42.3

4474

1.733

15.4

Minnesota Vikings

1641

515.10

41.2

4595

1.790

16.0

Carolina Panthers

1563

489.39

41.7

4409

1.675

18.6

Detroit Lions

1518

479.25

39.5

4509

1.706

19.0

Chicago Bears

1538

482.14

41.2

4325

1.691

19.4

Washington Commanders

1795

517.17

34.6

3687

1.516

19.6

New England Patriots

1152

375.34

39.3

4726

1.739

19.8

Los Angeles Rams

1579

471.73

33.0

3599

1.460

22.2

San Francisco 49ers

1159

376.73

36.0

3806

1.430

22.6

Jacksonville Jaguars

884

282.74

35.8

4415

1.582

23.2

Los Angeles Chargers

1349

427.84

34.9

3581

1.381

23.4

Buffalo Bills

953

311.62

29.5

3395

1.259

25.8

Seattle Seahawks

992

305.45

27.4

2823

1.092

27.4

Cincinnati Bengals

825

254.83

25.4

3073

1.140

28.2

Green Bay Packers

672

211.09

25.6

3155

1.149

28.4

Indianapolis Colts

733

225.64

24.3

2883

1.084

29.4

Atlanta Falcons

670

205.29

21.1

2436

0.903

31.2

Denver Broncos

457

153.58

19.6

2435

0.908

31.8

If we combine the five separate rankings, we can see that the Patriots’ draft capital is on average ranked 20th in the league. There are some minor differences depending on the value chart used, however.

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The classic Jimmy Johnson chart as well as the modified version by Pats Pulpit’s own Rich Hill both have New England ranked 24th in the NFL. The other three, meanwhile, think higher of the club’s collection of picks: the Chase Stuart chart has the Patriots 20th, with Over the Cap and Pro Football Focus ranking them 15th and 16th, respectively.

Through all of this, it becomes clear that Eliot Wolf and the Patriots are in a more challenging position capital-wise than they were in 2024 and 2025. Nonetheless, they do have the means of moving up and down the board; owning a lot of picks is still not a bad thing regardless of where they are positioned.

At the end of the day, it’s about how they are used.